Netsonic's Bloghttp://blog.netsonic.net
Web hosting industry news, web tips and more.Wed, 08 Aug 2018 13:00:32 +0000en-UShourly1https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.10http://blog.netsonic.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/cropped-15185577713_f89e0d1515_m-32x32.jpgNetsonic's Bloghttp://blog.netsonic.net
3232Why do you need SEOhttp://blog.netsonic.net/why-you-need-seo/
http://blog.netsonic.net/why-you-need-seo/#respondWed, 08 Aug 2018 13:00:32 +0000http://blog.netsonic.net/?p=971What SEO Happens On our blog we talk a lot about SEO and search engines as a reason why a service might help your business and website. However we never really explained what SEO is, how the search engines affect SEO, and what does your rankings mean. So here is your crash course into SEO...

On our blog we talk a lot about SEO and search engines as a reason why a service might help your business and website. However we never really explained what SEO is, how the search engines affect SEO, and what does your rankings mean. So here is your crash course into SEO and why your business should care about it.

Consumers trust ads less, and it’s becoming harder to grab their attention. We live in a world where 20 people are selling the same product and you can order it to your doorstep with a click of a button. Our consumers have options, some that might be cheaper, or look better, but they fulfill an need. This a new challenge for marketers who can no longer just focus on having a great product, fantastic customer service, and putting a few ads out there.

First Off Lets Define Some Vocabulary

SEO –

is an acyronme it stands for Search Engine Optimization. It’s the process of making sure that the content you post on a website, is being correctly read, and indexed by a search engines.

Search Engine –

A search engine is Google, Yahoo, Bing, or any other place you type a question into to get an answer. A search engine’s job is to crawl the internet for the keywords that you typed in, so it can bring back the best webpages to answer your questions.

Bot or Spider –

A Bot or a Spider is what search engines use to crawl your website. They quickly read whats on your website. They look at headings, urls, social proof, if it’s a secure website and a million other little things. The information the bots or spiders find are filed away that. That information is then indexed for later. This way when someone enters in a keyword to the search engine, they already have the results from what the bots and spiders indexed before.

Keyword –

A keyword is a word, phrase or sentence. For example let’s say you want to go on a summer road trip to Yellowstone National Park, and you need information on things to do in Yellowstone. You might type in “things to do in Yellowstone” into Google. Google then looks through all the webpages that their bots and spiders collected and pulls up the results with anything that had “things to do in Yellowstone” in it.

Rankings –

Every webpage you write has a ranking assigned to it by search engines. This ranking can go up or down depending on the changes you make to your website. If you add things that the bots and spiders read thats part of the algrothim your rankings will go up, if you have factors the algrothim doesn’t like your ranking will go down.

How SEO works

As a business and website owner, a marketer, or just someone who uses the internet you know that you normally don’t scroll down past the first page. This means if your website isn’t on the first page potential consumers won’t see your website. This type of SEO is called organic. This means you did nothing but give the people and search engines what they want, and didn’t for any type of as to be displayed. The people came to your website because they choose to.

Normally Organic SEO is the most common and perffered way. People normally trust the webpages and the content on it. The content is normally easy to read, and reverent to the searcher. The great thing for you is you don’t have to pay a search engine to get on the first page. You just need to know the algorithm, and adjust your website accordingly. That might mean hiring an SEO expert to find keywords, making sure your website is properly coded to display specific features, and that content is written properly. If you don’t want to hire someone band new you could also make it part of your marketing teams tasks, or take on the responsibility on your own.

SEO WordPress Plugins

If you run a blog on WordPress, you can download a plug in called Yoast SEO. Yoast SEO that helps make sure the content your writing is understandable to the people around you and search engines. It takes some of the guessing out of writing your content. It’s simple to use. Install the plug in and every article that you write or have written will be given a color in two categories. Like a stop light the colors are green, yellow and red. You want every article to be green, you want to see little to no yellow, and you don’t want any red. Yoast SEO gives you suggestions telling you how to fix something. The great news is you can go back after to old article and fix them improving your SEO ranking on that. Using Yoast SEO is easy but like any new program takes time to learn. Netsonic does offer a WordPress hosting.

]]>http://blog.netsonic.net/why-you-need-seo/feed/0Types of Redirects and When To Use Themhttp://blog.netsonic.net/types-redirects-use/
http://blog.netsonic.net/types-redirects-use/#respondWed, 01 Aug 2018 18:12:09 +0000http://blog.netsonic.net/?p=964What Are Redirects A redirect is the process of forwarding one URL to different URL. On websites you might have to tell servers to bring people to another URL. Its kinda like this, if you have ever moved to a new apartment or house you have to fill out a form at the post office and...

A redirect is the process of forwarding one URL to different URL. On websites you might have to tell servers to bring people to another URL. Its kinda like this, if you have ever moved to a new apartment or house you have to fill out a form at the post office and submit it. This was all of your mail gets forwarded to your new apartment or house.

Why Use Redirects

Redirects can be boring and tedious depending on the size of the project. This can lead to lower motivation and procrastination about getting the job done. However having pages with errors isn’t good for business. When an error happens it confuses, and upsets visitors. Visitors to the website with an error on it could trust the website less.

Not only do errors upset visitors but search engines. By not properly using a redirect to direct traffic to the right place your SEO rankings can be lower. The search engine can put less weight on your pages because they read it as a double copy, or see visitors are leaving the webpage because the content must not have helpful.

Reasons You Might Need To Redirects

There a few different reasons you need to use a redirect on your website.

Deleting a page or post

Moving your site to a new domain

Dropping www. in your domain

Enabling permalinks in WordPress

Merging websites

Changing your CMS (Content Management System)

Changing your URL Structure

Types Of Redirects

The 3 most common redirects are;

301 Permanent Redirect

302 Found

307 Temporary Redirect

While these aren’t redirects they are extremely useful to know;

410 Content Deleted

451 Content Unavailable For Legal Reasons

301 Permanent Redirect

A 301 Permanent Redirect is the most common redirect that is used. Normally when you use this type of redirect it means that you changed something in your permalink structure, and are not ever going to use the old URL. This tells the search engines that the information that visitors might be looking for no longer exists at this location but can now be found here. Search engine then index the correct page and make sure that the old url isn’t being indexed. If the person in charge of the website or SEO doesn’t do a 301 permanent redirect or does it incorrectly, the website’s SEO rankings could lower and visitors will see a 404 error message.

301 Permanent Redirect Recap

Most common redirect.

Commonly used for permalink structure changes.

Used when you have no intent of using old URL.

Let’s search engines index the correct page.

302 Found

A 302 Found is a temporary redirect, that tells the server that it has the information it’s requesting but it’s now in a new location. You would use this type of redirect if you intended on using the old URL again. For example let’s say your website has a page called Seasonal Offers, and every year you have a Cyber Monday Sale and a Christmas Sale. The cyber Monday sale’s url might be : www.mywebsiteexamples.com/seasonal-offers/cyber-monday-sale and your Christmas sale url might be www.mywebsiteexamples.com/seasonal-offers/christmas-sale. You might want to use the url’s for each of the sales pages again but redirect them to to show up on the Seasonal Offer page depending on what sale is currently going on. Even though the server knows to bring traffic to the other url a 302 Found doesn’t tell the server why the redirect is happening.

302 Found Recap

Temporary Redirect.

Tells server that the website has the information it’s just in a new location.

Used if you intent on reusing the urls.

Server doesn’t know why the redirect is happening.

307 Temporary Redirect

307 Temporary Redirect have replaced 302’s as valid temporary redirects after HTTP 1.1 came about. A 307 works in the same way as a 302 Found with one minor change. A server knows that the URL has been moved to a temporary location and will not be back in awhile.

307 Temporary Redirect Recap

Replaces and is similar to a 302 Found

The server knows why the content ways temporarily moved.

410 Content Deleted

A 410 Content Deleted code tells servers and visitors that the content has been deleted and isn’t coming back. This prevents 404 error codes, that hurt your SEO rankings and upset visitors.

410 Content Deleted Recap

Tells search engines & visitors that content is deleted.

Prevents 404 error codes

451 Content Unavailable For Legal Reasons

Sometimes for many different reasons a website might get a seize and assist letter or have a judge tell them they have to take down content from a page. This might because they shared information that was copy written, wasn’t suppose to be public, or another number of reasons. The main point of a 451 is to tell search engines that you would like to complete there request however you can’t for legal reasons.

451 Content Unavailable For Legal Reasons Recap

]]>http://blog.netsonic.net/types-redirects-use/feed/0Is Your Business Optimized for Mobile?http://blog.netsonic.net/business-optimized-for-mobile/
http://blog.netsonic.net/business-optimized-for-mobile/#respondTue, 03 Jul 2018 21:30:15 +0000http://blog.netsonic.net/?p=953Why Optimize for Mobile? Right now you might be reading this on your phone. If you aren’t someone is. Each person who visits your website is a potential customer, and you could be loosing profits if your business hasn’t optimized for mobile traffic yet. Ways To Optimize for Mobile Mobile Friendly Website Have you ever...

Right now you might be reading this on your phone. If you aren’t someone is. Each person who visits your website is a potential customer, and you could be loosing profits if your business hasn’t optimized for mobile traffic yet.

Ways To Optimize for Mobile

Mobile Friendly Website

Have you ever been to a website on your phone, that has text so small you have to zoom in. Everything is really hard to see, and is super inconvenient. That is a website that has not been optimized for the web.

The first step to making sure your business is optimized for mobile is to make sure your business has a mobile friendly website. One of the most common ways is to make sure your website is responsive. Having a responsive website means that the layout automatically redesigns itself to fit the size of the device’s screen.

Prepare Content For Mobile

Beside having a website design that will look good and is easy to read you need to make sure the content on that website is also. You can do this by making some simple but effective changes to your content.

When you write for mobile make it scannable. You can do this by changing how you write your websites copy. Make the paragraphs shorter, add pictures, and include bullet points.

Shorter headlines also look better on mobile devices. They are easier to read and look nicer on a smartphone screen.

Lastly make sure your add a great attention getter in the first sentence or two. A visitor sees less on a smartphone verses a desktop screen. That means you have less time to make them care enough to continue scrolling down the page.

Screenshot of a Netsonic blog post but from a smartphone.

Screenshot of a Netsonic blog post taken on a desktop computer.

Get Social

80% of social media users spend their social media time on mobile. That’s not surprising considering how much we scroll through facebook randomly throughout the day. However if your posting links to your social media that goes back to your blog, and your post and site is optimized for desktop your potential customers might leave your website.

Optimize For Local Searches

Have you ever been in a new city and typed into google “places to eat in (insert city name here)”. Google pulls up a list of places to eat and you quickly look at the reviews, then hit the driving directions. This is considered a local search.

No matter what your business is, people need to find and get to you. Make sure you use geo-targeted keywords, in your titles, headers, and content can make your business easier to find.

Create a Google Business Page, to help optimize for mobile. A Google Business Page tells potential customers important information. It includes your businesses hours, address, phone number and review on your business.